Pena v. Women's Outreach Network, Inc.

35 A.D.3d 104, 824 N.Y.S.2d 3
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 26, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 35 A.D.3d 104 (Pena v. Women's Outreach Network, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pena v. Women's Outreach Network, Inc., 35 A.D.3d 104, 824 N.Y.S.2d 3 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sullivan, J.

Plaintiff seeks to recover for injuries sustained when she fell from a stairway while exiting a medical van where she had undergone a mammogram administered by defendant Women’s Outreach Network (WON). The van, a used RV that WON had converted into a medical van in order to provide its services on a mobile basis, had two sets of stairs, one for entry and the other, in the rear, for exit. The rear exit stairs consisted of three fixed interior steps and two exterior metal steps that, by use of a lever, extended from underneath the van. The metal steps had treads. There was a metal pipe at the back door of the van to hold onto when exiting.

On October 9, 1999, the van was in the parking lot of St. Joan of Arc Church in the Bronx, where WON was offering mammograms, free of charge, to anyone in the neighborhood. At about 11:00 a.m., plaintiff entered the van and was administered a mammogram. After the procedure, she proceeded to exit the van through the open back door when, as she described it,

“I stepped down on the first metal stair with my right foot [and] then went forward to place my left [106]*106foot on the second metal step when my right shoe became stuck on the step. I then lost my balance and fell onto the parking lot. My right shoe remained on the step.”

Plaintiff was unable to identify any cause of the accident other than her shoe, which she described as flat heeled, becoming caught on the step. As a result of the fall, plaintiff sustained injuries including, among other things, a fracture of the right foot, which required three surgical procedures. She has required the use of a cane to walk since the accident.

Plaintiff commenced the instant action in November 2000. After joinder of issue and discovery, plaintiff filed a note of issue in October 2003, which defendant moved to strike on the ground that discovery had not been completed. On December 17, 2003, Supreme Court granted the motion “to the extent of directing plaintiff to furnish the outstanding discovery within 90 days from the date of this order. Failure to comply will result in the note of issue being stricken.” Thereafter, on March 1, 2004, plaintiff served a supplemental bill of particulars, which indicated a second surgery on her right foot in June 2002. It also specified for the first time the purported dangerous condition that caused the fall, i.e., “Defective third step.” Several days later, at a pretrial conference, the court directed plaintiff to submit to another deposition. On March 15, 2004, plaintiffs counsel wrote to defense counsel, advising that his client was in full compliance with the December 17, 2003 order. Thereafter, on May 7, 2004, plaintiff appeared for the court-ordered deposition. On June 4, 2004, defense counsel wrote to plaintiffs attorney, demanding further discovery concerning her medical condition.

On September 2, 2004, defendant moved for summary judgment, setting forth as good cause for the delay in moving the fact that discovery was still ongoing. In support of its argument, defendant referred to the court’s December 17, 2003 order granting further discovery and stressed that such discovery was needed in order to obtain a clearer understanding of the case. As to the merits, defendant argued that, as the evidence showed, it neither created any purported defective condition on the stairs nor had notice of such condition.

In opposing, plaintiff argued that the untimely motion should not be entertained because good cause for the delay had not been shown, noting that when, on March 15, 2004, her counsel had notified defendant that she was in full compliance with the [107]*107December 17, 2003 order, defendant never responded or took any action to strike the note of issue. In addition, plaintiff argued that the discovery defendant sought had to do with her medical condition and not the issue of liability, which was the basis of the summary judgment motion. The discovery relevant to that issue, plaintiff argued, was complete before the filing of the note of issue.

Plaintiff also argued that summary judgment was unwarranted because her fall was due to the defective nature of the medical van’s steps, as to which defendant had, at a minimum, constructive notice. Plaintiff pointed to the deposition testimony of WON’s employees on duty at the time of the accident. Each testified that the subject stairs were in the same condition in the photographs as they were on the date of the accident. Plaintiff pointed to the absence of a guardrail or handrail on the rear steps and argued that the treads on the metal steps “were inappropriate and inadequate.”

In support of her claim of defective stairs, plaintiff submitted an affidavit from Robert Schwartzberg, a professional engineer, who, after reviewing, inter alia, pictures of the steps, found that treads on the metal steps were “worn and discolored” due to foot traffic and “expos[ure] to the elements over a prolonged period of time.” He also noted the absence of a guardrail alongside the steps in the van’s interior and, although there was a handle mounted to the exit door and “a metal pipe and rod type assembly outside the [van] and on the opposite side of the stairway from the door,” “[n]either the handle [n]or pipe assembly . . . protruded into or over the length of the treads or were positioned exactly in line with the ends of the treads.”

Schwartzberg was of the opinion that “there existed unsafe conditions at the subject stairway in the form of unguarded and open treads at the ends thereof, a failure to provide riser heights and tread widths of uniform dimension and a failure to install handrails or guardrails in an appropriate manner,” all of which should have been apparent to defendant. In referring to various sections of the state Building Code and the Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code, Schwartzberg also noted that the stairs were not in compliance with good and accepted practice.

In reply and in support of its good cause argument, defendant pointed out that plaintiff underwent a third surgery in July 2004 and that a further deposition had been ordered. Defendant argued that it was “entitled to all discovery, including all medi[108]*108cal records and expert reports in order to fully assess liability and make a proper motion for summary judgment” (emphasis in original). Defendant also argued that the December 17, 2003 order should be construed as self-executing, without the need for another motion to strike the note of issue. As to the merits, defendant decried the value of Schwartzberg’ s’ opinion that the steps were not in compliance with the State’s Building Code, which was clearly inapplicable to the subject medical van.

Supreme Court granted the motion, finding good cause for the delay in moving based upon the parties’ continued exercise of their discovery rights. It rejected plaintiffs argument that the continued discovery dealt only with the issue of her medical condition, citing plaintiff’s March 2004 supplemental bill of particulars, which alleged additional liability claims. On the issue of liability, the court found that plaintiff, while claiming that her shoe became stuck on a step as she exited the van, failed to establish a defect. The court also rejected Schwartzberg’s opinions based on an inapplicable Building Code. We agree.

Since the Court of Appeals decision in Brill v City of New York

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Bluebook (online)
35 A.D.3d 104, 824 N.Y.S.2d 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pena-v-womens-outreach-network-inc-nyappdiv-2006.